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Man On Fire

It’s not like Anthony Davis expected this, either. Coming into the season, expectations for the New Orleans Pelicans were sky-high, having run off an 11-14 record to close last season following the trade for DeMarcus Cousins that nevertheless inspired hope in a fan base accustomed to insipid displays by 11 of a dressed 12 on any given night.

In this era of normalizing the relatively small – that is, getting used to seeing otherwise jarringly large humans between 6’7” and 6’10” thrown into lineups and deemed “small for their position, traditionally, but with the ability to space the floor!,” the Twin Towers look had been out of fashion with few exceptions. Then, literally during last season’s All-Star Weekend, the Pelicans traded for the Swiss Army knife that is Boogie to pair alongside erstwhile Best in the World-in-waiting Anthony Davis.

The tandem worked kinks out toward the end of last season, the team re-signed Jrue Holiday and brought Rajon Rondo in for maximum weirdness, and everybody prepared for the Pelicans to be THE League Pass fodder to watch. Until…they meshed, better than expected, and went 27-21 through their first 48 games.

Both Davis and Cousins were named All-Star starters. Cousins had a 44-point triple-double against the certifiably hapless Chicago Bulls and followed that up two games later by going 16-13-11 in the very game he went down for the season with a torn Achilles. At the time, the Pelicans were the aforementioned 27-21, sitting in an uncomfortable-yet-manageable sixth in the Western Conference, half a game up on the Portland Trail Blazers and six and a half up on the Utah Jazz, looking to finally bring Boogie to the postseason while giving The Brow only his second playoff series ever.

Many bemoaned Boogie’s injury, yours truly included as a witness, believing it spelled doom for New Orleans. The Pellies nabbed Nikola Mirotić from the Bulls in an effort to steady the front court, and then 35-year-old ex-Rookie of the Year and former Charlotte Bobcat Emeka Okafor, having not played since the last time the Knicks made the playoffs (2013), showed up to alleviate some things.

Here are some charts, showing exactly what AD has done with and without Boogie this season in essentially replacing Cousin’s 25.2 points, 12.9 rebounds and 5.4 assists per game[1]. In blue are Anthony Davis’ averages before the Cousins injury; in red, those same stats post-injury, and now I’m trusting you to be able to read a graph without a title:

All of the sudden, New Orleans wasn’t bound to anchor itself at its pre-Boogie injury win total and hope for contract negotiations to break their way. Anthony Davis remembered that, at his best, he is one of the five best basketball players walking this planet, and he essentially decided that he’d like to go ahead and have a playoff berth, Alex. For his efforts, he’s even shoved himself back into the MVP conversation, albeit nominally given James Harden’s incredible season, though Davis may very well still finish in the Top-3.

Merely calling what AD has done over the past three months “remarkable” is reducing it to winning a third grade spelling bee, or hitting a half-court shot to win a car. Davis’ skill set is still beyond comprehension and, at 25 years and a single month (as of today) old, may very well not yet be fully realized. As Elgin, Oscar, Magic, KG and LeBron have, Anthony Davis still carries the possibility of changing the very game of basketball as we know it, provided he has enough supplies on such a lonely island to see himself through to the other side.

A necessary aside: Cousins’ contract is up this summer. It is a tough fact with which the Pelicans’ organization knew may have to reconcile when it traded for him last year, and now, not unlike Kawhi Leonard on a longer deal in San Antonio, it raises as many question marks as a suit tailored for Matthew Lesko. Even so, the Davis-Cousins partnership worked for the half of a season under Alvin Gentry that should matter, and the Jrue Holiday signing has not seemed to be a bust yet, even in the slightest[2]. All of this could and should matter in Cousins’ free agency decision.

There was a time when The Brow™ was bound to be the greatest NBA player alive. That time may have passed, and it may also be ahead of us (LeBron’s obscene bill of health and unimpeachable greatness is the only thing keeping him from getting right there for a sustained period, really). Right now, there is no reason not to enjoy Anthony Davis, and with the Pelicans headed into the playoffs, there are at least four more opportunities to do so. Hope for more.

[2] Not to mention Rondo, whose untethered passing genius has remained into meaningful minutes this season, buoyed by a better-than-career-average shotmaking ability and the kind of veteran leadership that coaches often espouse but which rarely sees manifestation on the court. And yes, Rondo has always been a personal favorite of mine, but he really has been good this season in New Orleans, a full decade(!) after he won a championship in Boston.